IMAGE: Working in collaboration with a team from the Leibniz Institute for New Materials, a group of physicists at Saarland University, led by Professor Uwe Hartmann (photo), has for the first...
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The thinnest materials that can be produced today have the thickness of a single atom. These materials - known as two-dimensional materials - exhibit properties that are very different compared with their bulk three-dimensional counterparts. Until recently, 2D materials were produced and manipulated as films on the surface of some suitable 3D substrate. Working in collaboration with a team from the Leibniz Institute for New Materials, a group of physicists at Saarland University, led by Professor Uwe Hartmann, has for the first time succeeded in characterizing the mechanical properties of free-standing single-atom-thick membranes of graphene. The measurements were performed using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM). The researchers have published their results in the specialist journal Nanoscale.

Two-dimensional materials have only been known for a few years. In 2010, the scientists André Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their research work on the material graphene - a two-dimensional allotrope of pure carbon. Following that discovery, a number of other 2D materials made from silicon or germanium were produced and characterized. "The special feature of these materials is that they are only one atom thick - they are practically all surface," explains Professor Uwe Hartmann, an experimental physicist at Saarland University. As a result they possess physical properties that are wholly different to their more conventional three-dimensional relatives.

"The electronic properties of some configurations of graphene are spectacular. The electrons in the interior of the material are relativistic, i.e. they obey the laws of relativity theory, which is certainly not the case for electrons in conventional materials. This suggests a number of interesting advantages for electronic components manufactured from two-dimensional materials," says Hartmann. The mechanical properties of these 2D materials are also unique. According to Hartmann: "Some configurations of these two-dimensional materials exhibit a degree of mechanical stability that is - relative to the thickness of the material -far greater than that seen in the most stable three-dimensional materials." In order to exploit this potential, the EU established its Graphene Flagship project in 2013. With a research budget of €1 billion it is to date the EU's largest research initiative.

However, information on the mechanical properties of these novel materials has so far been derived from simulations. "Up until now, working with two-dimensional materials has meant working with ultrathin films on the surface of a suitable three-dimensional substrate. As a result, the properties of the overall system are inevitably determined by the three-dimensional material," explains Hartmann. Working in collaboration with the Leibniz Institute for New Materials (INM), which is also located on the Saarbrücken campus, Hartmann's research team at the Department of Nanostructure Research and Nanotechnology has for the first time succeeded in directly measuring the mechanical properties of a free-standing, single-atom layer membrane of the carbon allotrope graphene.

"We are now in a position to directly compare the data from model calculations with our experimental findings. In addition, we can now measure how different defects in the membrane's crystal lattice affect its mechanical properties," says Professor Hartmann. These two-dimensional materials hold significant promise of innovative developments in a variety of technological sectors from sensors and actuators to filter systems and fuel cells. The results and methods developed by the team in Saarbrücken are therefore of major interest in numerous fields of research.

The scientists in Saarbrücken used a graphene monolayer that was supported on a substrate with a regular array of circular holes. Hartmann explains the set-up as follows: "The holes had a diameter of about one micrometre. Using a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) we were able to analyse the free-standing membrane above the holes with atomic precision."

"When an electrical voltage is applied between the tip of the STM and the single-atom-thick membrane of graphene, an electrical current flows," explains Hartmann. This current, which is known as the "tunnelling current", is very sensitive to the distance between the microscope tip and the membrane sample and to the electron distribution in the graphene film. "We use this effect to make the individual atoms visible. The tunnelling current varies while the STM tip is scanned over the material." But the researchers also make use of another effect. When a voltage is applied between the tip of the STM and the sample, a force acts on the free-standing graphene membrane and it begins to bulge towards the tip. "As the tip is withdrawn, the atomically thin monolayer bulges even more, as it is effectively being lifted up by atomically precise tweezers. Measuring the membrane deflection as a function of the electrostatic pulling force generated by the STM yields a stress-strain diagram that provides us with the key mechanical properties of the graphene membrane," explains Hartmann.

"By recording these experimental stress-strain diagrams, we have been able to directly verify the extraordinary mechanical properties that have been presumed up until now for these materials. And we were able to do this using forces of the order of a billionth of a Newton - far, far smaller than any force used in a conventional mechanical measurement," says Hartmann. The researchers were also able to show that when a force was applied to a free-standing membrane of graphene, the membrane did not behave like the smooth skin of a kettledrum but looked much more like the rippled surface of a lake. The membranes exhibit a range of wavelike motions and they respond to any external disturbance by generating new ripples in the membrane's surface."

Physicists at the Department of Nanostructure Research and Nanotechnology at Saarland University, which is headed by Professor Uwe Hartmann, are investigating the fundamental properties of nanosystems, such as electronic transport and magnetism, but are also studying the developmental mechanisms of nanostructured systems and biological applications of the nanosciences. The most important instruments used to examine nanoscale systems are scanning probe microscopes, which enable many of the properties of these systems to be measured with atomic resolution. The researchers carry out some of their experiments at temperatures as low as -270 °C and under conditions of extreme vacuum, while others are performed under normal ambient conditions. The research work aims to improve understanding of the ways in which nanostructured materials behave and to encourage the development of new materials and components.

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